DocumentCode
10756
Title
Temperature Versus Magnetic Pressure at the Surface of a Semi-Infinite Plate
Author
Loffler, Markus J. ; Schneider, Markus
Author_Institution
Westphalian Energy Inst., Westfalische Hochschule, Gelsenkirchen, Germany
Volume
41
Issue
10
fYear
2013
fDate
Oct. 2013
Firstpage
2815
Lastpage
2818
Abstract
Transient high magnetic pressures are characteristic of pulsed power applications such as electromagnetic forming, electromagnetic acceleration, and other applications involving high electric currents. Typically, the current pulses are switched on rapidly (microsecond time scale) leading to very high current densities at the surface of the current-carrying conductors due to current-field interactions (skin effect). Electromagnetic diffusion is too slow to enable a spatially homogeneous current distribution inside metal conductors on this time scale. The very high current densities locally generate high ohmic power leading to Joule heating losses and increasing the conductor´s surface temperature rapidly. Moreover, high local thermal stresses are induced in the region close to the surface. The combination of magnetically and thermally induced stresses and Joule heating can lead to severe damage of the conductor, including phase transitions and deformations. This paper presents a formula that allows estimating the surface temperature of a semi-infinite conductor being exposed to a transient magnetic pressure at its surface. While this is a textbook problem, if adiabatic conditions are assumed, the approach taken here considers thermal diffusion inside the conducting material. The presented formula is valid if the conductor´s physical constants do not depend on temperature and magnetic flux density.
Keywords
conductors (electric); diffusion; electric current; electroforming; magnetic flux; plates (structures); pulsed power supplies; skin effect; thermal stresses; current-carrying conductors; current-field interactions; electromagnetic acceleration; electromagnetic diffusion; electromagnetic forming; high electric currents; high ohmic power generation; magnetic flux densities; metal conductors; pulsed power applications; semi infinite conductor; semi infinite plate; skin effect; spatial homogeneous current distribution; surface temperature estimation; temperature pressure; thermal diffusion; transient high magnetic pressures; Conductors; Current density; Electromagnetics; Magnetomechanical effects; Materials; Plasma temperature; Saturation magnetization; Electromagnetic forming; magnetic pressure; railgun; skin effect; surface temperature; thermal shock;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Plasma Science, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0093-3813
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TPS.2013.2280970
Filename
6600924
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